Oxygen Bars - Is A Breath Of Fresh Air Worth It?

Oxygen Bars: Is a Breath of Fresh Air Worth It?

Peppermint, bayberry, cranberry, wintergreen. Breath mints? Scented candles?
No--they're "flavors" of oxygen offered at your local oxygen bar.
Since oxygen bars were introduced in the United States in the late 1990s, the
trend has caught on, and customers are bellying up to bars around the country to
sniff oxygen through a plastic hose (cannula) inserted into their nostrils. And
many patrons opt for the "flavored" oxygen produced by pumping oxygen
through an aroma en route to the nose.

The oxygen experience in a bar can last from a few minutes to about 20
minutes, depending on customers' preferences and the size of their wallets. The
price of about a dollar a minute could leave you gasping for air, but frequent
inhalers may get a discount.

Most oxygen bar proprietors are careful not to make medical claims for their
product, and state that their oxygen is not a medical gas--it's made and offered
strictly for recreational use. But under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act, any type of oxygen used by people for breathing and administered by another
person is a prescription drug. "It doesn't matter what they label it,"
says Melvin Szymanski, a consumer safety officer in the Food and Drug
Administration's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). "At the
other end of the hose is oxygen, and the individual that provides you with the
nasal cannula and turns on the canister for your 20-minute supply is actually
dispensing the prescription drug oxygen to you."

Although oxygen bars that dispense oxygen without a prescription violate FDA
regulations, the agency applies regulatory discretion to permit the individual
state boards of licensing to enforce the requirements pertaining to the
dispensing of oxygen, says Szymanski. Many states choose to allow oxygen bars;
others discourage the businesses by requiring strict compliance with the law.
However, serious health claims made for oxygen, such as curing cancer or
AIDS,
or helping ease arthritis pain, would be investigated by the FDA, adds Szymanski.

Healthy or Just Hype?
Oxygen fans tout the benefits of oxygen as reducing stress, increasing energy
and alertness, lessening the effects of hangovers, headaches, and sinus
problems, and generally relaxing the body. But there are no long-term,
well-controlled scientific studies that support these claims for oxygen in
healthy people. And people with healthy lungs don't need additional oxygen, says
Mary Purucker, M.D., Ph.D., a pulmonary specialist in CDER. "We've evolved
for millions of years in an atmosphere of about 21 percent oxygen."

The American Lung Association says that inhaling oxygen at oxygen bars is
unlikely to have a beneficial physiological effect, but adds "there is no
evidence that oxygen at the low flow levels used in bars can be dangerous to a
normal person's health."

People with certain medical conditions are another matter. Some need
supplemental oxygen, but should not go to oxygen bars, says Purucker. People
with some types of heart disease, asthma, congestive heart failure,
pulmonary hypertension, and chronic obstructive pulmonary
diseases, such as emphysema,
need to have their medical oxygen regulated carefully to oxygenate their blood
properly, says Purucker. "If they inhale too much oxygen, they can stop
breathing."

People who have received bleomycin, a chemotherapy used to treat some types
of cancer, are in danger if they are exposed to high levels of oxygen for too
long, adds Purucker. "People think oxygen is good, but more is not
necessarily better."

One of the FDA's biggest concerns about oxygen bars is the use of
"flavored" oxygen, says Purucker. The flavor is produced by bubbling
oxygen through bottles containing aromatic solutions and then pumping the
vaporized scent through the hose and into the nostrils. Some bars use oil-free,
food-grade particles to produce the aroma, but others may use aroma oils.
Inhaling oily substances can lead to a serious inflammation of the lungs, known
as lipoid pneumonia. Even if an oil-free medium is used, the purity or sterility
of the aerosol that is generated cannot be guaranteed. Susceptible customers run
the risk of inhaling allergens or irritants that may cause them to wheeze.
Inhalation of live contaminants such as bacteria or other pathogens may lead to
infection.

Other Oxygen Hazards
Although oxygen doesn't burn, it does fuel the combustion process.
"Smoking anywhere near oxygen, even in the same room, can be extremely
dangerous," says Duane Sylvia, a consumer safety officer in CDER. While
some oxygen bars are located in health spas or other facilities that don't allow
smoking, others are found in nightclubs or casinos where smoking is common.
Another fire hazard is the addition of substances, such as oils, in an
oxygen-enriched environment.

Improper maintenance of oxygen equipment presents a potential danger. Some
oxygen concentrators use clay filters, which can start growing pathogenic
microorganisms that can cause infection if they are not changed regularly.

And oxygen cylinders can be very hazardous if they are stored on their sides
or not kept in a well-ventilated area, says Sylvia.

Pumping Oxygen
Most oxygen bars use either "aviators breathing oxygen" or oxygen
extracted out of the air in the bar. Aviators breathing oxygen (ABO) is a
medical-grade oxygen, not less than 99.0 percent pure, intended for commercial
or private aircraft use. ABO should not be used for recreational inhalation or
medical therapeutic treatment of humans or animals.

Many oxygen bars use a concentrator, which filters out the nitrogen and other
gases in the air circulating in the room, and then delivers the concentrated
oxygen, about 95 percent pure, through a hose at a continuous flow rate. But
oxygen users inhale the surrounding air along with the oxygen pumped through the
nose hose, which decreases the concentration. The concentration is further
decreased when oxygen is pumped through an aroma. According to one oxygen bar
supplier, the customer gets less than 50 percent pure oxygen.

Although breathing these low levels of oxygen may not hurt a healthy person,
"people have nothing to gain by frequenting oxygen bars, and subject
themselves to unnecessary risk," says Purucker.

Oxygen and Sports
We've all seen it on TV--a football player runs off the field after a play
and dons an oxygen mask. "They don't need it," says Conrad Earnest,
Ph.D., director of exercise physiology at the Cooper Institute in Dallas.
"It's one of the biggest placebo effects going," he adds. "It's a
combative activity, so yes, the players are going to be out of breath, but it's
because of massive exertion--not because of lack of oxygen." The exception,
says Earnest, might be athletes who play at higher elevations than they are used
to, and don't have time to acclimate. "If the New York Giants go to play
the Washington Redskins, the benefit of oxygen--if any--would be so small it
wouldn't be measurable. But if they go to play the Denver Broncos--going from
sea level to a mile-high altitude--they may be helped by oxygen while recovering
from a play."

And products with added oxygen, such as oxygenated water, sports drinks, and
skin sprays don't impress Earnest, who refers to their suppliers as putting
"sales before science." "If you drink oxygenated water, either
the water passes through the gut and has no effect, or the acid in the stomach
reacts with it and the only effect of the oxygen is that it will cause you to
burp more," he says.

The Air Up The atmospheric pressure decreases as altitude increases, making it more
difficult to breathe. But people living at high altitudes do adapt to their
environment without using additional oxygen, says Mary Purucker, M.D., Ph.D., a
Food and Drug Administration pulmonary specialist. "The blood becomes more
efficient at transporting oxygen to tissues."
For additional information, please visit the MedicineNet.com
Healthy Living Center.
The above information has been provided with the kind
permission of the US Food and Drug Administration (www.fda.gov).

Sources:

IMAGES PROVIDED BY:

istock

REFERENCES:

Medically reviewed by John A. Daller, MD; American Board of Surgery with subspecialty certification in surgical critical care June 22, 2017